A Counselor’s Introduction to Neuroscience is a guidebook
to neurobiology that is customized for counselors’ unique
goals and requirements. Drawing on years of experience, not
only in the lab, but in the counselor’s chair, the authors
unravel the complexities of neuroscience and present an
easily understood volume that is an essential companion for
any counselor who wishes to expand his or her understanding
of the human brain, how it works, and how it creates our
identities.
*Contents:*
Preface Acknowledgements About the Authors List of
Contributors Guide to Neurocounseling Language. 1....

Presenting a neuroscientifically aware approach to art
therapy.
Art Therapy and the Neuroscience of Relationships,
Creativity, and Resiliency offers a comprehensive
integration of art therapy and interpersonal neurobiology.
It showcases the Art Therapy Relational Neuroscience (ATR-N)
theoretical and clinical approach, and demonstrates how it
can be used to help clients with autobiographical memory,
reflecting and creating, touch and space, meaning-making,
emotions, and dealing with long-term stress and trauma.
The ATR-N approach, first developed by Noah Hass-Cohen, is
comprised of six principles: Creative Embodiment, Relational
Resonating, Expressive Communicating, Adaptive Responding,
Transformative Integrating, and Empathizing...

This book brings interpersonal neurobiology into the
counselling room, weaving the concepts of neurobiology into
the ever-changing flow of therapy.
Neuroscientific discoveries have begun to illuminate the
workings of the active brain in intricate detail. In fact,
sometimes it seems that in order to be a cutting-edge
therapist, not only do you need knowledge of traditional
psychotherapeutic models, but a solid understanding of the
role the brain plays as well. But theory is never enough.
You also need to know how to apply the theories to work with
actual clients...

This title is a comprehensive guide to the biological
mysteries that lie behind teenage behaviour. Contrary to
popular (parental) opinion, teenagers are not the lazy,
unpleasant - frankly, spotty - louts they occasionally
appear to be. During the teenage years the brain is
undergoing its most radical and fundamental change since the
age of two. Nicola Morgan's carefully researched, accessible
and humorous examination of the ups and downs of the teenage
brain has chapters dealing with powerful emotions, the need
for more sleep, the urge to take risks, the...

Helping clients control their own emotional reactivity.
When conditions like anxiety and depression are experienced
chronically, they condition neural pathways and shape a
person’s perception of and response to life events. As
these pathways are reinforced, unhealthy neural networks
turn on with increasing ease in the presence of conscious
and unconscious triggers. In this groundbreaking book,
Kershaw and Wade present Brain Change Therapy (BCT), a
therapeutic protocol in which clients learn to manage their
emotions and behaviours, and thus reduce stress and control
emotional reactivity.
Drawing from the latest neuroscientific research...